Example sentences of "many of [art] [noun pl] [prep] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 A friend of Degas , who was probably the most potent influence on his art , he absorbed many of the doctrines of Impressionism — especially its concern with contemporary life , even at its most squalid .
2 Many of the tasks of soldiers of the UN battalion are of this humanitarian nature , rather than purely operational .
3 Investigators suspect that many of the cargoes of coal had a high sulphur content .
4 Territories here are seen as action-facilitating in the sense that many of the patterns of action we have observed rely for their appropriateness on the fully defined context in which they take place .
5 The important point , though , is that the discourse touches many of the lines of force active within the discipline at that moment , and — despite subsequent transformations of the relationships between English , education , culture , and democracy — still active in the 1980s .
6 For those who did n't get to know , some of the local fraternity cut many of the lines on Friday night or Saturday morning .
7 The Royal Victoria Hospital treats many of the casualties of Belfast violence .
8 His data confirm many of the conclusions of Lal ( 1981 ) .
9 The essential unity of the stratigraphy and tectonics of the Palaeozoic on opposite sides of the North Atlantic was pointed out by Bailey ( 1929 ) , and developed in two important papers by Waterschoot van der Gracht in 1938 ( a and b ) which anticipated many of the conclusions of plate tectonics , and charted the course of the Variscan Front under southern Britain and Ireland .
10 An international comparison of union attitudes to work organisation found that British unions adopted a neutral position on this subject.8 Many of the experiments in work organisation in this country have been conducted without the involvement of workers ' trade union representatives .
11 I see no reason whatsoever , to take the more organised Filane Emirates and Yoruba chieftainates as examples , why some of the more advanced communities should not enjoy many of the advantages of self-government
12 This can be a significant amount , which may offset many of the advantages of leasing .
13 But many of the layers of sediment are not at all uniform and may be relatively thin in places .
14 Now many of the locals in Pisco are frightened .
15 The aversion argument was extracted from its literary context and elevated into a full-blown defence of crudity in the Oz case : " One of the arguments was that many of the illustrations in Oz were so grossly lewd and unpleasant that they would shock in the first instance and then would tend to repel .
16 WE CONTINUE TO OFFER A CHOICE OF EQUIPMENT , INTERIOR STYLING AND LAYOUT SO THAT MORE THAN EVER THE OYSTER 68 OFFERS MANY OF THE BENEFITS OF A COMMISSIONED ‘ ONE OFF ’ , BUT WITH LESS RISK , EXPENSE AND WITH PREDICTABLE STANDARDS OF PERFORMANCE QUALITY .
17 Many of the benefits of programmes , or decision units , were unable to be quantified so that the ranking process could not always take place .
18 A great deal is stuffed into Knowledge Adventure disks through the use of high efficiency compression algorithms and John Cave says that many of the benefits of CD ROM are featured like full motion video , sound , music and speech — without the need for any additional hardware like a CD ROM drive .
19 They are fascinating in themselves , but they also offer us humans many of the benefits of pet ownership more commonly attributed to dogs and cats .
20 The tombs represent a period of wealth and expansion in the sixth and seventh centuries B.C. Many of the finds in sculpture and decoration have been taken to museums , but the chambers remain .
21 Second , they have stressed that many of the innovations in peasant agriculture before 1905 were undertaken in areas where the commune prevailed .
22 In July a military rising broke out in Spanish Morocco , was supported by many of the garrisons in Spain , and came under the leadership of Generals Mola and Franco .
23 Many of the artists on show of course are quite elderly , and some of them are dead .
24 Within the further education sector , the FEFCs [ Further Education Funding Councils ] will take over many of the duties at present the responsibility of local authorities .
25 Many of the residents in homes for the elderly have no family , and many that do never see them from one year to the next .
26 Many of the operations of mind , for example high-speed addition , skilled typing , or playing a musical instrument are not readily examined through introspection .
27 Many single gene inherited diseases are caused by mutations which affect hepatic function , including haemophilia , phenylketonuria , and many of the disorders of cholesterol metabolism .
28 In particular , this project seeks to develop a single data model in which attribute and topographic geometry are stored under the same relational architecture — so avoiding many of the shortcomings of systems utilising independent structures for attribute data and their spatial references .
29 Another argument in its support is that many of the developments in systems analysis , such as structured systems analysis , participation and prototyping which are discussed later in this chapter , can be incorporated into the conventional approach .
30 Many of the developments in taxonomy in the recent past have involved the use of computers , but staff in RBG have been limited by the inadequate facilities previously available , which have made it extremely difficult for them to become involved in work in this field .
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